Bell Erica J
University Department of Rural Health, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2013 Jan-Mar;13(1):2343. Epub 2013 Feb 12.
If climate change is the 21st Century's biggest public health threat, research faces the major challenge of providing adequate evidence for vulnerable communities to adapt to the health effects of climate change. Available information about best practice in climate adaptation suggests it is inclusive of socio-economic disadvantage and local community factors such as access to health services. Since 1995, at least 19 164 papers have been published on climate change in the health sciences and social sciences. This body of literature has not yet been systematically examined for how well it serves rural communities.
The ultimate aim of the study was to contribute to better understandings about what climate adaptation research has been done and is needed for rural communities. The two research questions were: 'What kinds of content define climate change research in disciplines that could potentially contribute to adaptation for health?' and 'How is content about rural and Aboriginal communities and best practice in adaptation related to this content?' A quantitative content analysis was performed using 'computational linguistics' Leximancer software. The analysis included 19 164 health and social sciences abstracts, batched by years, from 1 January 1995 to 31 July 2012. The relative frequency and co-occurrence of 52 concepts in these abstracts were mapped, as well as associations with positive or negative sentiment for selected concepts.
Aboriginal' concepts tend to be relatively infrequent (3% and 5% overall likelihood of occurrence, respectively) and are more associated with socio-economic concepts in the social sciences than the health sciences. Multiple concepts in the health sciences literature are typically connected with 'disease' and ultimately 'science' storylines, with a 38% likelihood of paired co-occurrence of 'health' and 'disease' concepts alone. The social sciences appear more focused on the local and particular issues of community in climate change than the health sciences. 'Rural' and 'Aboriginal' concepts have increased by 1% across both discipline areas, since 2011 for the 'rural' concept and since 2004 for the 'Aboriginal' concept. 'Health' concepts in the health sciences and 'economic' concepts in the social sciences, as well as 'urban' concepts, are referred to more positively than either the 'rural' or 'Aboriginal' concepts.
While care needs to be taken in interpreting the results of this study too negatively for rural and Aboriginal communities, they suggest that a disease focus dominates climate and health research typically unconnected to wider socio-economic and human system factors. This finding needs to be considered in light of the accumulating evidence of the importance of such contextual systemic factors in understanding climate and health effects and responses. The study adds some support to the view that a key priority is bringing the learnings of applied community-based researchers, from those in rural health to those in the social sciences, to climate research. There is a need to build confidence, including in the rural health sector which has arguably been slow to participate in programs of climate change research, that community-based research could make a difference to rural health in a climate-changing world.
如果气候变化是21世纪最大的公共卫生威胁,那么研究面临着一项重大挑战,即要为弱势群体提供充分证据,以帮助他们适应气候变化对健康的影响。有关气候适应最佳实践的现有信息表明,这应包括社会经济劣势以及诸如获得医疗服务等当地社区因素。自1995年以来,健康科学和社会科学领域至少发表了19164篇关于气候变化的论文。尚未对这一文献体系如何服务于农村社区进行系统研究。
该研究的最终目的是有助于更好地理解针对农村社区已经开展了哪些气候适应研究以及还需要开展哪些研究。两个研究问题是:“在可能有助于健康适应的学科中,哪些类型的内容界定了气候变化研究?”以及“关于农村和原住民社区的内容以及适应方面的最佳实践与该内容有何关联?”使用“计算语言学”Leximancer软件进行了定量内容分析。分析涵盖了1995年1月1日至2012年7月31日按年份分批的19164篇健康科学和社会科学摘要。绘制了这些摘要中52个概念的相对频率和共现情况,以及与选定概念的积极或消极情感关联。
“原住民”概念出现的频率相对较低(总体出现可能性分别为3%和5%),并且在社会科学中比在健康科学中更常与社会经济概念相关联。健康科学文献中的多个概念通常与“疾病”以及最终的“科学”主线相关联,仅“健康”和“疾病”概念成对共现的可能性就有38%。与健康科学相比,社会科学似乎更关注气候变化中社区的局部和特定问题。自2011年“农村”概念和自2004年“原住民”概念以来,两个学科领域中“农村”和“原住民”概念均增加了1%。健康科学中的“健康”概念、社会科学中的“经济”概念以及“城市”概念,比“农村”或“原住民”概念得到更积极的提及。
虽然在对农村和原住民社区过于负面地解读本研究结果时需谨慎,但这些结果表明,疾病焦点主导了气候与健康研究,而这通常与更广泛的社会经济和人类系统因素无关。鉴于此类背景系统因素在理解气候与健康影响及应对措施方面的重要性的证据不断积累,这一发现需要加以考虑。该研究为以下观点提供了一些支持,即一个关键优先事项是将应用社区研究人员(从农村健康领域到社会科学领域)的经验教训引入气候研究。有必要建立信心,包括在农村卫生部门(可以说其参与气候变化研究项目的速度一直较慢)建立信心,即基于社区的研究能够在气候变化的世界中对农村健康产生影响。